Who is your favourite revolutionary? |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: September 05 2015 at 02:46 | |||
What the Axis collaborators did during WWII in the Balkans was horrific and shameful on the entire human race. The post-WWII retaliation and reprisals by the Partisan forces was not on the same scale but it was no less horrific and just as deplorable, again you can pretend this never happened but the official forensic evidence says otherwise. Mass-murder of unarmed prisoners and civilians can never be justified, regardless of whatever ideology you support. One crime does not condone another. I take no sides here, I detest war, murder and killing regardless of the cause. My own country has a shameful 400 year history of war-crimes that I am not proud of. Just recently a mass grave of Scottish prisoners captured after the Battle of Dunbar in 1650 was discovered in Durham - it seems that these prisoners died from neglect (hunger, exhaustion and dysentery) rather than execution but that is no excuse.
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What?
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dr wu23
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 22 2010 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 20623 |
Posted: September 05 2015 at 06:59 | |||
A very interesting character...I enjoyed this book some years ago..... |
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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin |
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Svetonio
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 20 2010 Location: Serbia Status: Offline Points: 10213 |
Posted: September 05 2015 at 10:20 | |||
Edited by Svetonio - September 05 2015 at 10:27 |
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GKR
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 22 2013 Location: Brazil Status: Offline Points: 1376 |
Posted: September 05 2015 at 10:57 | |||
Talking about africans: Frantz Fanon (actually a martinican, but fight in the Algeria revolution), Amílcar Cabral, Nkrumah, Lumumba, Biko...
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- From each according to his ability, to each according to his need.
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SteveG
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 11 2014 Location: Kyiv In Spirit Status: Offline Points: 20604 |
Posted: September 05 2015 at 11:49 | |||
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Svetonio
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 20 2010 Location: Serbia Status: Offline Points: 10213 |
Posted: September 05 2015 at 12:44 | |||
Tito and Julius Nyerere, President of Tanzania Tito and Jomo Kenyatta, President of Kenya Tito and Kenneth Kaunda, President of Zambia Tito and Musa Traore, President of Mali Tito and Ahmed Sekou-Toure, President of Guinea |
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Otto9999
Forum Groupie Joined: September 02 2015 Location: Anywhere Status: Offline Points: 88 |
Posted: September 05 2015 at 12:59 | |||
Removed due to PA's deliberated act of deleting threads as alleged featuring negative behaviour posts towards others.
Edited by Otto9999 - October 31 2015 at 11:32 |
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emigre80
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 25 2015 Location: kentucky Status: Offline Points: 2223 |
Posted: September 05 2015 at 13:13 | |||
40 posts will get you to the level where you can vote in polls. p.s. agree with your point about the people listed.
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A Person
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 10 2008 Location: __ Status: Offline Points: 65760 |
Posted: September 05 2015 at 13:21 | |||
- Michael Scott
I am not particularly religious but I have a lot more respect for figures such as Jesus Christ or Siddhartha Gautama than I do for any advocate of violence. |
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infocat
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: June 10 2011 Location: Colorado, USA Status: Offline Points: 4671 |
Posted: September 05 2015 at 18:15 | |||
Edited by infocat - September 05 2015 at 18:17 |
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Frank Swarbrick Belief is not Truth. |
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JJLehto
Prog Reviewer Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Tallahassee, FL Status: Offline Points: 34550 |
Posted: September 05 2015 at 19:26 | |||
....To be fair, those are not exactly the type of people I'd want to be associated with Tito. Especially Mugabe IF that is an accurate quote, I would never want someone I like, since you are a fan of Tito, to be cited by Mugabe! Though I have to say, Mugabe is actually a beautiful example of what can, and very often does, go wrong with revolutionaries. The classic "revolutionary who may have meant well/done some good becoming the next problem once in power" is perhaps best summed up by him. Not just physically, but mentally...a huge danger with revolutionary mindset (I mean this to be through violence and not gradual change/ peaceful protest) is that the forces at work can easily get out of hand and not think rationally. Land reform may be a populist rallying cry and perhaps was a popular idea, Mugabe sure always pushed for it, but we all know how terrifyingly bad that turned out to be. Can't let emotion, especially when anger based, dictate events. Edited by JJLehto - September 05 2015 at 19:30 |
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JJLehto
Prog Reviewer Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Tallahassee, FL Status: Offline Points: 34550 |
Posted: September 05 2015 at 19:44 | |||
But yeah, the only revolutionaries I can respect are those who have achieved something through non violence.
Some classics are Portugal in '74, Czechoslovakia in '89, and the ones in Serbia, George, and Ukraine. These are ones that of course have been more mass movements, opposed to a single leader. The best way to reform, hate to be rain on the parade, is gradual change and natural processes. The end of capitalism, as it was known as the time, came thanks to the Great Depression, and leftist ideas being slowly implemented not via Communism or even Socialism...but by developing various forms of social democracy, more or less. Organized labor's biggest success came post WWII and it was through moderate capitalist democracy...not any of the more radical ways. Edited by JJLehto - September 06 2015 at 01:01 |
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Svetonio
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 20 2010 Location: Serbia Status: Offline Points: 10213 |
Posted: September 05 2015 at 23:54 | |||
One oak tree didn't survived, but another is still there in Tito's garden and it's really a georgeous living sculpture now. Edited by Svetonio - September 06 2015 at 00:25 |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: September 06 2015 at 04:31 | |||
"Many and sharp the num'rous ills Inwoven with our frame! More pointed still we make ourselves, Regret, remorse, and shame! And man, whose heav'n-erected face The smiles of love adorn, - Man's inhumanity to man Makes countless thousands mourn!" ~ Robert Burns To paraphrase Steven Weinberg: Good people do good things and evil people do evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes ideology.
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What?
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emigre80
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 25 2015 Location: kentucky Status: Offline Points: 2223 |
Posted: September 06 2015 at 09:32 | |||
Very well put, and it looks like some of us needed the reminder.
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someone_else
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: May 02 2008 Location: Going Bananas Status: Offline Points: 24293 |
Posted: September 07 2015 at 08:54 | |||
Quite interesting... According to Wikipedia, Tito passed away on May 4, 1980. Robert Mugabe became prime minister on April 18. But later in that year I got a crush on a girl whose Yugoslavian (probably Slovenian or Croatian) mother suspected that his death had been kept secret for about four months . Nevertheless, even though both of us seem to be prone to Western propaganda one way or another (example), Mugabe's development in after years, whether seen to coloured glasses or not, give him a certain connotation. When Tito was no more, he seems to have taken his second door neighbour Hastings Kamuzu Banda as his main influence: very dangerous to his opponents and living it up on top of the rock beyond a venerable old age.
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Guldbamsen
Special Collaborator Retired Admin Joined: January 22 2009 Location: Magic Theatre Status: Offline Points: 23104 |
Posted: September 07 2015 at 09:18 | |||
^Very much agree with you there.
We all see the world through our own little keyhole.......but you have got to inject a little common sense into all of this, and by that I mean implementing a critical and logical approach to history........and if you use those two when putting a man like Mugabe under the microscope, you'd no doubt have the same bad taste in your mouth as I had, when I first saw someone posting a pic of him in order to highlight another questionable 'revolutionary'. It is possibly the most surreal thing I've seen on PA as of yet (and I've seen some weird sh*t). Edited by Guldbamsen - September 07 2015 at 09:24 |
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lazland
Prog Reviewer Joined: October 28 2008 Location: Wales Status: Offline Points: 13626 |
Posted: September 07 2015 at 14:27 | |||
Absolutely, David. The key phrase you use is "through our own little keyhole", and Svetonio's is smaller than most. The poor people of Zimbabwe have, basically, swapped one repressive regime for another. A White Fascist regime for a black one, and neither any better than the other. Mugabe is not a freedom fighter, he is a dictator, who did, and continues to do, ruthlessly wipe out any form of legitimate opposition, and now acts in the finest tradition of ruthless dictators by grabbing as much money and assets as he can, and ensuring that the succession when he eventually buggers off to his maker is kept "in the family". That, by the way, will not succeed. When he dies, there will be all hell to pay, and, as usual, it will be the poor common people who suffer. Where Svetonio and I will probably find some common cause is who is, ultimately, to blame for all of this. It was the good old Imperialists. When we left, and Empire crumbled, we, under a cloud of liberal angst, or stupidity (delete according to taste), imagined somehow that our colonial subjects would adapt to a democratic system such as ours easily, and welcome it. Of course, our democracy (in reality, still a technocratic establishment ruling the roost) has taken centuries to develop. We expected them to have it in a couple of years. We still do, by the way. Just look at the mess we have made of the Middle East, imagining that the "Arab Spring" would lead to a utopian land of freedom and democracy. We keep sticking our oars in, and we always, without exception, make things worse. Revolution is very rarely, if ever, the answer. Following blindly, as Svetonio does, the words and deeds of atrocious, murdering lunatics, and their power mad followers, is never the answer. Common cause between decent, kind, but most of all, principled peoples of the world is. When we get there, I suspect I will be long gone from this mortal coil. A last word. So called Liberal democracies promulgate this mad idea that they (and it is they, in our name, but not us) imagine they can solve all of the world's problems with their own political template. In reality, they barely run their own countries, let alone anyone else. We are governed in the West by the hegemony of big money, and the establishment which leeches onto it. Having said that, I would rather that than being run by the mad Stalinists, Trots, Fascists, Religious maniacs, and all the other nasty little monkeys witnessed running some of these places. Svetonio's error is in believing that everyone who loathes our system is automatically virtuous and right. In most cases, they are a damned sight worse, and modern history bears very heavy witness to this. I despair of the left, and I am allowed to state this, because I was, once, a part of it. Look.......no photos to prove my point.......... |
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SteveG
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 11 2014 Location: Kyiv In Spirit Status: Offline Points: 20604 |
Posted: September 08 2015 at 12:41 | |||
I'm sick of his endless posting of photos that do absolutely nothing to aid his argumenst, so I'll stay away from this post for the remainder of it's life.
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Triceratopsoil
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 03 2010 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 18016 |
Posted: September 08 2015 at 13:01 | |||
Mugabe is begging the white farmers to come back because nobody left in Zimbabwe is willing or able to farm successfully... wow great coup
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